Gail Morgan, president of the Torrance High Alumni Foundation, discovered the vandalism on the morning of Veterans Day. She says the theft most likely occurred sometime after the end of October.

“I went over on Veterans morning to take down the old flag and put up new one and that’s when I discovered the vandalism,” Morgan said.

“It’s very disheartening because what’s important for people to know is that the memorial was built with all private funds. These were donations from 442nd vets, from widows, from people who went to Torrance High and people who believed in righting a wrong.”

Ron Yamada, president of the Ted Tanouye Memorial Foundation, said the committee is looking at replacing the plaque with alternate materials, rather than bronze.

“We think it was more related to the scrap value, not related to anything as far as either being a war memorial or Japanese American,” Yamada said.

Torrance police are investigating the incident as a grand theft, estimating the value of the three-foot bronze plaque at $7,000. Scrap metal thieves are all too common. In January, the portrait of Rev. Howard Toriumi was stolen from the memorial plaque at Toriumi Plaza in Little Tokyo.

Tanouye volunteered for the 442nd Regimental Combat Team in 1943. He was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor in 2000 for his heroic charge to capture a strategically important hill on July 7, 1944 near Molino A Ventoabbto, Italy. He died on Sept. 6, 1944, days after he was wounded by an exploding land mine near San Mauro, Italy.

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The Rafu Shimpo has been the nation's leading Japanese American newspaper since its original publication. We are proud to have served the Japanese American community from our Little Tokyo office in Downtown Los Angeles since 1903.